Golden Tate Agrees To Four-Year, $37.5M Deal With Giants
According to National Football League reporter Ian Rapoport, the Pittsburgh Steelers might not be done in free agency yet. Tate is coming off a poor campaign in which he was dealt from Detroit to Philadelphia midway through the season.

Kyle Busch completes weekend sweep
Working his way up from fourth, he stalked Ryan Blaney for over 30 laps before finally making the go-ahead pass on Lap 296. In the final segment, Elliott reported a vibration before spinning on the next lap, bringing out a caution.

Wall Street ekes out gains at open after inflation data
Briefing.com analyst Patrick O'Hare said Boeing's impact on the Dow was not indicative of the performance of the wider market. The S&P index recorded 43 new 52-week highs and one new low, while the Nasdaq recorded 50 new highs and 18 new lows.

"We are saddened by the recent allegations surrounding the college admissions allegations", the statement reads.

As Loughlin faces a federal indictment, Crown Media said that is "no longer working with" her and that it has halted development of all its productions involving her, including "Garage Sale Mysteries", even though the series is made by an independent third party.

The makeup company Sephora made a decision to give Giannulli the ax on account of her mother's alleged involvement.

Hallmark Channel told the Associated Press that actress Lori Loughlin will no longer be involved with the network after starring in more than a dozen of the network's films. Their lawyer has declined comment.

Also on Thursday, the cosmetic giant Sephora announced the company would be ending a makeup partnership with Loughlin's daughter.

Loughlin and fellow actress Felicity Huffman were named in a massive college admissions scam in which parents used bribery as well as false test scores and scholarships to help their children into reputable universities.

"We are evaluating all creative options related to "When Calls the Heart" series", the company stated. It's quickly moved to respond to any flare-ups, such as removing a gift wrap from circulation after one person complained of seeing a swastika in its pattern. But the white-collar crime Loughlin is accused of is akin to that of another unlikely scofflaw: Martha Stewart, who was convicted in 2004 of obstructing justice and lying to the government about a stock sale. So did her empire, despite Stewart's efforts to separate her personal actions from it: "Wrong - you're the brand", he said.

"There are other actresses out there, whether they find or develop another to replace her", said Ries.